42-2 Critical Mass Bulletin
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CriticalMass CriticalMassBulletin Newsletter of the Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements, American Sociological Association Volume 42 (2) http://cbsm-asa.org/ Fall 2017 2017-2018 Section Officers Chair Updates from Your New Section Chair Jennifer Earl Chair-Elect Jennifer Earl Jo Reger CBSM Section Chair Past Chair Kenneth (Andy) Andrews Professor of Sociology University of Arizona Secretary/Treasurer Jocelyn Viterna Council Edward Walker The CBSM section is an 800+ person-strong section Neal Caren determined to understand how people try to change their John Krinsky Ziad Munson communities, nations, and the world. At least in my lifetime, we have never been Amin Ghaziani needed more. It is an honor to lead the section this year and to try to support the work Lisa Leitz of our members as much as I can during that time. Although I will have more Committees Mentoring (appointed) substantively to say in my next column, in my first Chair’s Column for the CBSM Deana Rohlinger newsletter I wanted to reflect on a few goals I have as Chair this year, provide some Soma Chaudhuri updates, and also invite your feedback. Dana Moss Nominations Rachel Einwohner My first goal sounds routine but is actually quite important. I want to leave the David G. Ortiz section like I would leave a campsite: better off than I found it. My second goal is a Catherine Corrigall-Brown process-based one: open up processes to the membership and work as transparently as Publications possible. My third goal is an outcome-focused goal: promote the work of younger Chair: Drew Halfmann Joshua Bloom members and promote an inclusive section. With these goals in mind, I am working Kyle Dodson with the other section officers, council members, and committee members on a Workshop number of initiatives. Melissa Wooten Alison Adams Ana Velitchkova First, following my campsite metaphor, Andy Andrews (past-Chair), Jocelyn Viterna Membership Selina Gallo-Cruz Nicole Fox In This Issue Edelina Burciaga Callie Liu Watkins Message from the Chair................................................................................ 1 Maria Mora Jeff Larson In Memoriam: Greg Maney.......................................................................... 2 Cecelia Walsh-Russo Why Can’t We All Just Get Along? Factionalism in Animal Rights........... 4 Devparna Roy Melissa Wooten Memory Activism: Reimagining the past for Future Activism in Israel..... 6 ASA 2017: Leadership, Strategy, and Organization in Social Movements. 7 Webmaster ASA 2017: Consequences of Social Movements........................................ 8 Alex DiBranco Recent Publications...................................................................................... 9 Newsletter Editors Stacy Williams CBSM Awards 2017.................................................................................... 11 Daniel McClymonds Calls for Papers & Other Opportunities........................................................ 14 Please send all your ideas, feedback, and submissions 1 to [email protected]. CriticalMass (Secretary/Treasurer), and I have been working to better forecast our financial needs and resources. We build a historical archive of CBSM-relevant began a discussion of CBSM Workshop locations and documents that can help future councils and chairs are going to continue to work with the Workshop and ensure that fundamental documents—like our committee on their recommendations about our next bylaws—are well curated. Alex DiBranco has been preconference. doing a great job of updating the website, making sure that our membership and others also have access This has all been a lot of work, but it has been made to accurate and updated information. much lighter by the effort of many hands. Heidi Reynolds-Stenson has been integral to helping me In terms of openness and transparency, as you keep things on track as Chair, for which I am deeply hopefully read through the section listserv, I opened grateful. All of the officers, Council members, and up the session planning process by inviting proposals committee members have been so responsive and for panels through an online form and then worked to dedicated. Members have also been quite involved, maximize the number of CBSM sessions and also sending in lots of proposals and ideas and also facilitate junior scholars organizing panels. Finally, I volunteering to help wherever possible. Thanks to shared a detailed discussion of the selection process all! with the section through the listserv. In closing, our section is critical to understanding Third, the Membership, Diversity, and Inclusivity how we make change together. In a time where (MDI) Committee worked on a successful change seems so hard to come by on the one hand, membership drive to keep us over eight hundred and so present in campaigns like #MeToo on the (allowing us to retain the same number of ASA other hand, facilitating CBSM research is integral. I sessions as we had last year). Given a new ASA hope to count you all as continuing members in 2018 so that we can continue this important work together. policy that only allows gifted student memberships to I invite your feedback to me via email at be counted toward annual meeting totals if they are [email protected]. gifted in the first half of the year, MDI will also be doing a spring membership drive, which is much earlier than is usual. MDI is also collaborating with the Mentoring Committee to revitalize and expand In Memoriam: Greg Maney their efforts and help inclusivity animate our programs more broadly. I hope that we will have By Pamela Oliver, Lynne M. Woehrle, and more to share with members about this in the early Patrick G. Coy new year. The CBSM section, along with many other people In other committee updates, the Nominations and groups, mourns the untimely death of Gregory Committee has fielded a great slate of candidates, M. Maney on September 2, 2017, after a long illness. setting up our Spring elections. The Call for Awards In his relatively short life and even while battling is also ready. The Publications Committee has been cancer, Greg accomplished much more than most. operating on a number of fronts, including working on a social media strategy and also a discussion He developed a passion for social justice as a young listserv. Stacy and Daniel, our new newsletter editors, person in Tulsa, Oklahoma. He graduated magna cum are also a great addition to the Publications team. laude with a degree in international relations from Brown in 1989, earned a master’s in labor studies Council has also held a follow-up teleconference to from the University of Massachusetts Amherst in our meeting at the ASAs. We agreed on some broad 1994, and completed his PhD at the University of budget priorities and also to try out a new process Wisconsin in 2001. Right from the start, he was a that may help our council and future CBSM councils scholar-activist who devoted significant energy and 2 CriticalMass commitment to social justice campaigns while also ethno-national conflicts, the strategic waging of nonviolent moving his own research forward and establishing an conflicts, and strategies for sustaining peace processes. early habit of publishing high-quality research that All of Greg’s work was characterized by robust met all the external standards of academic quality. As research and sophisticated analysis that detailed how a graduate student, he contributed to research on complex the processes of intergroup conflict could be. news coverage of protests while pursuing his own Much of his work centered on Northern Ireland, research on peace movements in Northern Ireland where he showed the mixed effects of the Irish and small studies of labor movements and Catholic diaspora on the conflict and, more broadly, transnational movements in Latin America. how transnational connections sometimes hurt rather than helped social movements. Another part of his In 2001 he was hired by Hofstra University and built Irish studies work revealed how violent and a career there that continued to combine an energetic nonviolent conflict fed each other. As he maintained commitment to doing original research and bringing his connection with Ireland and spent several stints as it to publication with a deep passion for helping a Visiting Research Professor at Queens University in social justice organizations achieve their goals. He Belfast, he continued his research on Irish movements was beloved at Hofstra for being an inspirational and mural arts in West Belfast. Greg also drew teacher who was named a Distinguished Teaching comparisons between the conflicts and peace Professor, for his leadership in faculty governance, processes in Ireland and the Middle East. and for building bridges between the University and the local community. He worked to build the Hofstra Beginning in the 2000s, in collaboration with Lynne Center for Civic Engagement to involve students in Woehrle and Patrick Coy, Greg published a book and community research and devoted substantial efforts a series of articles about how peace movement to numerous projects, including the Lifeway network activists were shaping antiwar discourses to address to study human trafficking in the New York area, the concerns about patriotism and supporting troops. Long Island Alliance for Peaceful Alternatives, the After the mid-2000s, while keeping up publications Long Island Immigrant Alliance to respond to hate about ethno-national violence and peace movement crimes, the Workplace Project on human rights issues